|
Nation's robust growth benefits other countries
(03/10/2003)
China's top advisers said a robust Chinese economy is a blessing
for other countries, rather than a threat.
As China grows, it will become a bigger market for the rest of
the world, said economists and members attending the ongoing first
session of the 10th National Committee of the Chinese People's Political
Consultative Conference (CPPCC).
There had been talk that China had forced down prices globally
by grabbing a greater share of the international market with its
low-priced exports.
Lin Yifu, a CPPCC 10th National Committee member and also a noted
economist, disagrees.
Li said China's export enterprises mostly trade in processed goods.
Any growth in such exports would require a corresponding increase
in imports -- that is, every US$100 of exports requires at least
US$50-70 worth of imports.
China's thriving processing trade therefore means an expanding
market for many economies, Lin said.
China (including the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region) already
imports more from the rest of Asia than Japan does.
The capital that flows into the Chinese mainland also mainly comes
from Hong Kong and Taiwan.
In contrast, the capital invested in South-East Asian countries
mainly comes from the United States and Japan, Lin said.
Unlike in Japan and the Republic of Korea, industrial development
in China is mostly driven by domestic demand, he said.
For example, last year, sales of cars in China exceeded 1 million
for the first time, and are expected to rise by another fifth this
year.
Volkswagen and General Motors are among the biggest winners from
the trend, because even when the cars are assembled locally, many
of the components are imported.
China is now VW's biggest market outside Germany.
"Such patterns in exports and imports are, no doubt, beneficial
to other countries,'' Lin said.
Hu Angang, director of the Centre for China Studies with the Chinese
Academy of Sciences,
added that China, as a destination for exports from other economies,
is also opening wider, significantly lowering its tariff levels
after joining the World Trade Organization.
"In this sense, China is importing deflation,'' Hu said.
Hu said the impact that China's exports have exerted on global
price levels was overstated.
He said the effect is insignificant considering China's exports
accounted for a mere 5 per cent of the world's total.
Jia Qingguo, a CPPCC 10th National Committee member and a professor
of international relations with Peking University, said it is understandable
that a fast-growing China will draw worldwide attention.
Of those who regard China as a threat, some have ulterior motives,
but most simply do not understand China, the professor said.
A close analysis of relations between China and other economies
revealed "there was no need for other countries to worry that
China's increased export of products made by cheap labour would
squeeze their market shares,'' Jia said.
(China Daily)
 |